US treasury slaps sanctions on ‘ISIS-Bangladesh’

Screenshot of the US Treasury Department list in which ISIS-Bangladesh was mentioned

The Bangladesh government does not acknowledge that any Islamic State affiliate organization is active in the country.

The US Treasury Department on Tuesday added “ISIS-Bangladesh,” along with six other jihadist organizations and two individuals connected to Islamic State, to its sanctions list for global terrorism.

The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) wrote on its website that it had added Abu Musab Al-Barnawi of Nigeria and Mahad Moalim of Somalia, ISIS-Bangladesh, ISIS-Egypt, ISIS-Philippines, ISIS-Somalia, ISIS-West Africa, Jund al-Khilafah-Tunisia, also known as ISIS-Tunisia, and the Philippines-based Maute Group, also known as Islamic State of Lanao.

The Bangladesh government does not acknowledge that any Islamic State affiliate organization is active in the country.

The US State Department said in a separate statement that including the latest additions, it had designated 40 Islamic State leaders and operatives dating back to 2011 under an order aimed at denying them access to the US financial system.

“These designations are part of a larger comprehensive plan to defeat ISIS that, in coordination with the 75-member Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS, has made significant progress toward that goal,” the statement said, using a common abbreviation for Islamic State.

This effort “is destroying ISIS in its safe havens, denying its ability to recruit foreign terrorist fighters, stifling its financial resources, negating the false propaganda it disseminates over the internet and social media, and helping to stabilize liberated areas in Iraq and Syria so the displaced can return to their homes and begin to rebuild their lives,” the statement added.